| Literature DB >> 31593138 |
Ruofeng Yin1, Yuhang Zhu1, Zhenbo Su2, Pengyu Chang3, Qingsan Zhu1, Rui Gu1, Hongjian Xing1, Baolin Zhao1, Yuan An4, Fuwei Yang5, Bo-Yin Zhang1.
Abstract
RATIONALE: Intraspinal anesthesia, the most common anesthesia type of orthopedic operation, is regarded as safe and simple. Despite of the rare incidence, puncture related complication of intraspinal anesthesia is catastrophic for spinal cord. Here we present an intradural hematoma case triggered by improper anesthesia puncture. The principal reason of this tragedy was rooted in the neglect of spine deformities diagnosis before anesthesia. To the best of our knowledge, there is no specific case report focusing on the intradural hematoma triggered by improper anesthesia puncture. PATIENT CONCERNS: Hereby a case of thoracolumbar spinal massive hematoma triggered by intraspinal anesthesia puncture was reported. The presenting complaint of the patient was little neurologic function improvement after surgery at 6-month follow-up. DIAGNOSES: Emergency MRI demonstrated that massive spindle-like intradural T2-weighted image hypointense signal masses from T12 to S2 badly compressed the dural sac ventrally, and his conus medullaris was at L3/4 intervertebral level with absence of L5 vertebral lamina. Hereby, the diagnoses were congenital spinal bifida, tethered cord syndrome, spine intradural hematoma, and paraplegia.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31593138 PMCID: PMC6799862 DOI: 10.1097/MD.0000000000017553
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicine (Baltimore) ISSN: 0025-7974 Impact factor: 1.817
Figure 1(A) The sagittal T2-weighted image (T2WI) magnetice resonance imaging (MRI) showed the conus medullaris was at L3/4 intervertebral level (yellow arrow). The anesthesia puncture site was at L2/3 intervertebral level with T2WI hyperintense signal on the interspinous ligament (blue arrow). (B) On T2WI MRI, massive spindle-like intraspinal T2WI hypointense signal masses spread from T12 to S2 ventrally (yellow dotted line). (C–F) The sagittal T2WI MRI showed the massive spindle-like intradural mass compress the spinal cord and cauda equina badly on each segments.
Figure 2(A) The mid-sagittal reconstructed computed tomography (CT) showed the abnormal morphology of the vertebral bodies and spinous processes. (B–D) Axial CT demonstrated the vertebral laminae from L3 to L5 were more or less absent.
Figure 3Post the T12 to S1 laminectomy, a tight dural sac was encountered. (A, B) By making a midline incision, several dark red rope-like blood clots spread across cauda equine were discovered. (C) Noteworthy, serveral needle-like penetrating points were found on the conus medullaris, and posterior artery on the surface was pierced. (D) The cauda equina was casted into clots which immobilized those nerves in the sac. Yellow arrow = conus medullaris, blue arrow = anesthesia puncture site, yellow dotted line = hematoma.
Figure 4(A) The computed tomography (CT) volume reconstruction post OR. (B–E) Axial CT demonstrated decompression from L3 to L5.